RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Dirk Nowitzki)

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#81 » by 70sFan » Thu Aug 24, 2023 9:44 pm

One_and_Done wrote:
70sFan wrote:Discussing Dirk and Durant as the main scoring guys. Dirk posted a better scoring numbers in postseason if you exclude his Nash seasons and Durant's GSW seasons:

2005-12 Dirk: 28.0 adj pp75 on +7.3 rTS% (60.0 TS%)
2010-16 KD: 28.4 adj pp75 on +4.9 rTS% (57.5 TS%)

I don't see any reason to put Durant ahead as the main scoring option.

Limiting it to playoffs only, and then limiting KD to OKC only, makes no sense because the regular season has value too. So this sample doesn't work. Other samples, like the ones I provided on page 1, suggest a radically different conclusion when we add the years where KD actually had decent shooting around him.

Ok, whatever you wish:

2010-21 KD in RS: 29.2 adj pp75 on +8.2 rTS% (62.7 TS%)
2002-12 Dirk in RS: 26.9 adj pp75 on +5.1 rTS% (58.3 TS%)

2010-21 KD in PS: 29.1 adj pp75 on +6.3 rTS% (60.0 TS%)
2002-12 Dirk in PS: 26.8 adj pp75 on +6.5 rTS% (58.5 TS%)
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#82 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 24, 2023 9:53 pm

So just a couple thoughts pertaining to Pettit & Stockton:

1. I'm not nominating Pettit yet, but he's near that time for me. A thing he demonstrates that I look for when evaluating guys in rapidly changing times is an ability to get more effective statistically at a time when you'd think he should be getting less so. Pettit's efficiency goes up over the course of his career and thus allows him to maintain his TS Add, which given the fact that I think competition was rising rapidly in this time, makes me conclude that that there was nothing fundamental talent-wise holding him back. I think Pettit could be an all-star today.

I think a comparison with Karl Malone & Charles Barkley is telling because I think both Karl & Chuck are more physically talented than Pettit and would tend to give them the advantage over Pettit...but with regards to Barkley I have concerns about defensive effort and temperamental attitude. I give him the peak advantage over Pettit, but really not sure about career.

2. Stating up front that I'm talking about what was instead of what might have been, one of the things that holds Stockton back is that I just rarely see him as a serious candidate for the Top 5 in any given year. I'll absolutely acknowledge here that a key part of what's going on is that I'm giving Malone a Top 5 spot, and while I don't insist on not giving two guys from the team Top 5 slots, it doesn't happen that often.

I bring this up in part because of the conversation about accolades. Basically, Stockton's a guy who year-to-year just isn't in that top tier of accolade-getters the way most others in this rare air are, and so to the extent that we feel we can use this as a proxy for how impressive his years were, it naturally tends to hurt him. I think that part there is a place for debate so I'll acknowledge that before going to another point.

There are all sorts of all-in-one stats that absolutely love Stockton, and such stats are inherently more nuanced than rankings, so one can argue that the actual rank should be essentially thrown out because of how good Stockton's stats look.

I don't have Stockton super-low or anything, but I think where I tend to struggle is when I recognize 2 things:

1. The Jazz are as big of a deal as they are because of their peak in the mid-to-late '90s when the team became less about "Stockton and Malone" and more about "Malone and satellites". It's one thing for Stockton not quite be up there with his teammate, and quite another when we recognize that the team literally seems to peak as they relegate him to a smaller role.

2. There were times where we would have hoped that a 2nd star would take advantage of the pressure places on the 1st and put up big numbers - a la Big Game James Worthy. And the reality is that that's not how it was with Stockton for the vast majority of his career, and especially not so by the time the Jazz peaked. The fact that Stockton was an efficient scorer becomes less sexy when I see that he was so much likely than other players we tend to discuss at these ranks to decide "Okay, time for me to take over."

Stockton supporters will rightly point out that there were signs he could do something more along these lines early in his time as a starter, and thus arguably might've been able to do that in the Jazz years of contention. But even if that was simply a bad choice by Jerry Sloan, it's what was, and "what was" is what I'm personally trying to focus on with my criteria at this time.

It's possible that Stockton could have done what Nash did, but he didn't do it, and so Nash has an edge in my evaluation over him.

And I'll say that I think it's not just possible that Nash could have been playing at his MVP level years earlier, but I think he absolutely could have done so - I don't think he came into the league "raw" - and if he had done so he'd rank considerably higher on my list - higher than Kobe, for example - but that's not what happened, so that's not where I have him.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#83 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:06 pm

One_and_Done wrote:His peers were not outraged by Stockton's award recognition or lack thereof. He was felt to be ranked fairly. I'd also add the media's record of ranking players in awards has been so much better than player voted awards that it's not funny. The players are as bad as the fans, it's been an embarassment.


You think Stockton didn't get any award recognition? He was voted all-NBA 11 times. That's more than KD. Now granted, Magic and Michael did lock down the first team spots a lot of those years, but the idea that he wasn't recognized in his day is completely wrong. And now that we've learned over time how passing, defense, and efficiency are a lot more valuable than we thought relative to raw scoring volume, it makes sense that we'd value him even higher. And when we have analytics that rate his age 34-40 seasons higher than anyone of the last 26 years except for LeBron, KG, CP3, and Tatum? Well, it makes sense that we might revise that upward even further.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#84 » by Owly » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:10 pm

One_and_Done wrote:
Joao Saraiva wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Stockton was an all-star/all-nba type guard, not a star. The stars are who we ahould be discussing now. If PJ Tucker had really high impact stats should I rank him top 100? The answer is pretty obvious. You can't build a contending team around Stockton as the best player.


If he had the record of assists in NBA history, steals in NBA history, high impact stats, a great win%, great longevity, fantastic shooting and all time series where he outplayed Magic for example... well then you might want to consider him in the top 30, let alone top 100.

Let's not pretend Stockton isn't an unique type of player. He's a 9 time assist champion. He lead the playoffs in APG 10 times. He was a 60ts% type of guy before guys jacked up a ton of 3s, so he was definitely efficient. He definitely belongs in the conversation.

If you can build a contender arround Nash you can definitely build a contender arround Stockton.

And you can argue Stockton was our best player from 88 to 92.

Alot of what you're citing is accolades, not ability. I don't care who the all-time assists leader is, or how many apg he had. Obviously if a guy can average 15.4 ppg and 13.4 apg in a season he's an incredible player, except that player was Kevin Porter and he was far from incredible.


1979 Porter's
PER: 17.2 (worse than every Stockton season bar '85 and narrowly '86 - I think I'd say significantly worse in every case, unless 19.0 isn't far enough)
WS/48: .097 (worse than every single Stockton season, significantly worse than all bar '85)
BPM: 1.4 (worse than every Stockton season bar '85 - perhaps significantly worse in every case maybe '86's 2.4 isn't far enough)

Porter's full box profile isn't close to Stockton's and he's a much worse non-box player too. So sure as a response to lists just assists sure. But Stockton was huge assists and elite pg defense and elite efficiency and great turnover economy and great shooting. It's another bad analogy.

One_and_Done wrote:Stockton was not considered to be a superstar by his contemporaries, as the award voting makes clear.

Superstar is kind of fuzzy. And he was, for instance, selected to the Dream Team.
But sure, but what people thought is a very indirect measure of play.

One_and_Done wrote:I don't care what his advanced stats were

Okay so you don't care about impact stuff or presumably the box-side stuff ... but you are trusting award voting ...

One_and_Done wrote:It would be historically anomalous for 2 top 20 all-time type players to be on the same team for so long, with good team mates and coaching, and have so little to show for it.

1) Stockton isn't getting into the top 20.
2) The sample of two top 20 players together isn't the sort of sample from which one can draw anomalies.
2a) Anomalies do happen.
3) For a long time what were considered two top 10 players from a smaller pool of players, less history granted ... players with a lot of accolade recognition ... were on the same team for a considerable spell and didn't win a title together. Granted Elgin did technically, literally get a physical ring, but he wasn't a contributor to the title team.
Spoiler:
Of listings pulled from before 2000 of which I have 7 Baylor was
on average within the top 10 (9.428571429)
within the top 10 of those average rankings (even counting McDermott's rank above him in Patterson and Fisher, even though he's primarily not a major league era player; and me giving all those unranked in AP's poll an 11th rank [Baylor was ranked]) at tenth.

4) Good teammates? Of course it depends what one means (some? on average? for their salaries?). They did have one teammate (Hornacek) who was very good. But in general we have impact data that suggests the Jazz were very good with them on court and not so much when they weren't, including some deeply harmful rotation players/lineups (7.97 SRS 1997 Jazz -20.1 per 100 with Chris Morris on the court; -7.5 with Foster on; -2.7 with Carr on; -2.1 with Anderson on). Without those junky lineups that not only couldn't maintain the core lineups goodness but were actively losing that Jazz team would have posted an elite SRS from that and could have contended for HCA (W-L is a noisy bar of quality so it's down to a bit of luck), granting matching or topping 69 wins is a very high bar.

One_and_Done wrote:They have so many bad postseason exits. If Shaq and Kobe has performances like these 2 we'd roast them.

I mean it's not how I'd measure them but if the point is "bad postseason exits" for Shaq and Kobe ... they got swept in '99 and '98 (the latter by the Jazz) and defeated 4-1 in '97 (again by the Jazz). '97 the points diff suggests that outcome flattered the Jazz. If one is style oriented (I'm not) the Kobe airball nature of the exit wasn't great optics.

It's not important to me. I'd look at the players, at the bigger picture rather than just elimination, Kobe isn't in prime etc. But if it''s about manner of exit for Shaq and Kobe... there's some stuff there.

(Separately, Kobe does also have the allegation of giving less than his best effort in the '06 exit game. I'd tend not to believe a player would do that but ... it's very much out there along with other bad shooting nights or series whilst Shaq faced earlier sweeps.)
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#85 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:21 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:So just a couple thoughts pertaining to Pettit & Stockton:

1. I'm not nominating Pettit yet, but he's near that time for me. A thing he demonstrates that I look for when evaluating guys in rapidly changing times is an ability to get more effective statistically at a time when you'd think he should be getting less so. Pettit's efficiency goes up over the course of his career and thus allows him to maintain his TS Add, which given the fact that I think competition was rising rapidly in this time, makes me conclude that that there was nothing fundamental talent-wise holding him back. I think Pettit could be an all-star today.

I think a comparison with Karl Malone & Charles Barkley is telling because I think both Karl & Chuck are more physically talented than Pettit and would tend to give them the advantage over Pettit...but with regards to Barkley I have concerns about defensive effort and temperamental attitude. I give him the peak advantage over Pettit, but really not sure about career.

2. Stating up front that I'm talking about what was instead of what might have been, one of the things that holds Stockton back is that I just rarely see him as a serious candidate for the Top 5 in any given year. I'll absolutely acknowledge here that a key part of what's going on is that I'm giving Malone a Top 5 spot, and while I don't insist on not giving two guys from the team Top 5 slots, it doesn't happen that often.

I bring this up in part because of the conversation about accolades. Basically, Stockton's a guy who year-to-year just isn't in that top tier of accolade-getters the way most others in this rare air are, and so to the extent that we feel we can use this as a proxy for how impressive his years were, it naturally tends to hurt him. I think that part there is a place for debate so I'll acknowledge that before going to another point.

There are all sorts of all-in-one stats that absolutely love Stockton, and such stats are inherently more nuanced than rankings, so one can argue that the actual rank should be essentially thrown out because of how good Stockton's stats look.

I don't have Stockton super-low or anything, but I think where I tend to struggle is when I recognize 2 things:

1. The Jazz are as big of a deal as they are because of their peak in the mid-to-late '90s when the team became less about "Stockton and Malone" and more about "Malone and satellites". It's one thing for Stockton not quite be up there with his teammate, and quite another when we recognize that the team literally seems to peak as they relegate him to a smaller role.

2. There were times where we would have hoped that a 2nd star would take advantage of the pressure places on the 1st and put up big numbers - a la Big Game James Worthy. And the reality is that that's not how it was with Stockton for the vast majority of his career, and especially not so by the time the Jazz peaked. The fact that Stockton was an efficient scorer becomes less sexy when I see that he was so much likely than other players we tend to discuss at these ranks to decide "Okay, time for me to take over."

Stockton supporters will rightly point out that there were signs he could do something more along these lines early in his time as a starter, and thus arguably might've been able to do that in the Jazz years of contention. But even if that was simply a bad choice by Jerry Sloan, it's what was, and "what was" is what I'm personally trying to focus on with my criteria at this time.

It's possible that Stockton could have done what Nash did, but he didn't do it, and so Nash has an edge in my evaluation over him.

And I'll say that I think it's not just possible that Nash could have been playing at his MVP level years earlier, but I think he absolutely could have done so - I don't think he came into the league "raw" - and if he had done so he'd rank considerably higher on my list - higher than Kobe, for example - but that's not what happened, so that's not where I have him.


I don't think numbers can account for how much better Stockton was then Nash on defense. He didn't even gamble much and still averaged nearly 3 steals per game over his prime due to his incredibly quick hands and fast reactions. Meanwhile, Nash was a serious liability on D for most of his career and at times one of the worst defenders in the entire league. However, using some of those box score numbers, I think it's very interesting to compare Stockton and Nash's top 15 seasons by BPM:

Stock: 9.0, 8.9, 8.7, 8.5, 8.3, 8.3, 8.0, 6.8, 6.7, 6.6, 6.6, 6.6, 6.1, 5.6, 5.3
Nash: 5.9, 5.0, 4.7, 4.6, 4.3, 3.9, 3.4, 3.2, 3.1, 2.8, 2.5, 2.4, 1.4, 0.4, -0.9

That's a MASSIVE MASSIVE box score gap. I know Nash was better at making aggressive passes, but again remember, these numbers won't be able to understand the entirety of the defensive gap either. If you're wondering if the playoffs look any better for Nash they don't:

Stock: 12.0, 8.8, 8.7, 8.6, 8.4, 7.8, 6.7, 6.6, 6.4, 6.1
Nash: 5.2, 4.7, 4.6, 3.7, 2.4, 2.3, 2.2, 2.1, 1.7, 0.0

I think there's a tendency with Nash to be like "we can ignore his somewhat pedestrian box score numbers because his impact numbers are so much better", but with Stockton who also outperforms his box score numbers like crazy with impact numbers AND has elite box score numbers to begin with, he's completely marginalized. I think if we actually had play-by-play data for more of Stockton's peak years, people would be a lot less likely to question whether his peak held up to Nash and we'd be comparing him to people higher on the list instead.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#86 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:26 pm

You can’t just throw away KDs warriors years lol

You can justify why you don’t take them at face value which is perfectly fine but you can’t just take them out when making a comparison when those were probably his peak years
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#87 » by One_and_Done » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:29 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:His peers were not outraged by Stockton's award recognition or lack thereof. He was felt to be ranked fairly. I'd also add the media's record of ranking players in awards has been so much better than player voted awards that it's not funny. The players are as bad as the fans, it's been an embarassment.


You think Stockton didn't get any award recognition? He was voted all-NBA 11 times. That's more than KD. Now granted, Magic and Michael did lock down the first team spots a lot of those years, but the idea that he wasn't recognized in his day is completely wrong. And now that we've learned over time how passing, defense, and efficiency are a lot more valuable than we thought relative to raw scoring volume, it makes sense that we'd value him even higher. And when we have analytics that rate his age 34-40 seasons higher than anyone of the last 26 years except for LeBron, KG, CP3, and Tatum? Well, it makes sense that we might revise that upward even further.

We're talking about his recognition relative to MVP calibre guys. Stockton was a fine player, for a long time, but he is not a guy you build a contender around. Nash and Paul were.

Stockton's MVP record is nothing like the guys in this range. He has only 3 top 10 finishes (7th, 8th and 9th). Most of the time he's 11-15. Good player. Not even remotely in contention right now.

Same with his efficiency. He was an efficient guy, and that's good, but far more efficient guys are still not on the board when you consider efficiency tends to go down with increased volume. Harden was efficient, was a genuine franchise player, and has been nominated by nobody yet. Harden won MVP and has six top 5 finishes.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#88 » by Owly » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:29 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:So just a couple thoughts pertaining to Pettit & Stockton:

1. I'm not nominating Pettit yet, but he's near that time for me. A thing he demonstrates that I look for when evaluating guys in rapidly changing times is an ability to get more effective statistically at a time when you'd think he should be getting less so. Pettit's efficiency goes up over the course of his career and thus allows him to maintain his TS Add, which given the fact that I think competition was rising rapidly in this time, makes me conclude that that there was nothing fundamental talent-wise holding him back. I think Pettit could be an all-star today.

I think a comparison with Karl Malone & Charles Barkley is telling because I think both Karl & Chuck are more physically talented than Pettit and would tend to give them the advantage over Pettit...but with regards to Barkley I have concerns about defensive effort and temperamental attitude. I give him the peak advantage over Pettit, but really not sure about career.

2. Stating up front that I'm talking about what was instead of what might have been, one of the things that holds Stockton back is that I just rarely see him as a serious candidate for the Top 5 in any given year. I'll absolutely acknowledge here that a key part of what's going on is that I'm giving Malone a Top 5 spot, and while I don't insist on not giving two guys from the team Top 5 slots, it doesn't happen that often.

I bring this up in part because of the conversation about accolades. Basically, Stockton's a guy who year-to-year just isn't in that top tier of accolade-getters the way most others in this rare air are, and so to the extent that we feel we can use this as a proxy for how impressive his years were, it naturally tends to hurt him. I think that part there is a place for debate so I'll acknowledge that before going to another point.

There are all sorts of all-in-one stats that absolutely love Stockton, and such stats are inherently more nuanced than rankings, so one can argue that the actual rank should be essentially thrown out because of how good Stockton's stats look.

I don't have Stockton super-low or anything, but I think where I tend to struggle is when I recognize 2 things:

1. The Jazz are as big of a deal as they are because of their peak in the mid-to-late '90s when the team became less about "Stockton and Malone" and more about "Malone and satellites". It's one thing for Stockton not quite be up there with his teammate, and quite another when we recognize that the team literally seems to peak as they relegate him to a smaller role.

2. There were times where we would have hoped that a 2nd star would take advantage of the pressure places on the 1st and put up big numbers - a la Big Game James Worthy. And the reality is that that's not how it was with Stockton for the vast majority of his career, and especially not so by the time the Jazz peaked. The fact that Stockton was an efficient scorer becomes less sexy when I see that he was so much likely than other players we tend to discuss at these ranks to decide "Okay, time for me to take over."

Stockton supporters will rightly point out that there were signs he could do something more along these lines early in his time as a starter, and thus arguably might've been able to do that in the Jazz years of contention. But even if that was simply a bad choice by Jerry Sloan, it's what was, and "what was" is what I'm personally trying to focus on with my criteria at this time.

It's possible that Stockton could have done what Nash did, but he didn't do it, and so Nash has an edge in my evaluation over him.

And I'll say that I think it's not just possible that Nash could have been playing at his MVP level years earlier, but I think he absolutely could have done so - I don't think he came into the league "raw" - and if he had done so he'd rank considerably higher on my list - higher than Kobe, for example - but that's not what happened, so that's not where I have him.

So regarding Worthy and "big numbers" just looking at 87-89 his best box-playoffs and only '97 for Stockton, his healthier Jazz peaked run. Stockton's best game BPM is a 21.5 in the finals. That's better than all but all bar one of Worthy's games: a 22.1 in game one (an early series game ...) round 1 versus the -1.14 SRS Nuggets. There's more than one way to be effective.

BPM is only one measure, I'm open to discussion on the best single game metrics. This is only one Stockton game and run I'm looking at etc...
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#89 » by One_and_Done » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:32 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:You can’t just throw away KDs warriors years lol

You can justify why you don’t take them at face value which is perfectly fine but you can’t just take them out when making a comparison when those were probably his peak years

His post Warriors numbers also suggest that he could hit a higher baseline without the GSW halo effect. The issue was the spacing on those OKC teams.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#90 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:34 pm

One_and_Done wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:His peers were not outraged by Stockton's award recognition or lack thereof. He was felt to be ranked fairly. I'd also add the media's record of ranking players in awards has been so much better than player voted awards that it's not funny. The players are as bad as the fans, it's been an embarassment.


You think Stockton didn't get any award recognition? He was voted all-NBA 11 times. That's more than KD. Now granted, Magic and Michael did lock down the first team spots a lot of those years, but the idea that he wasn't recognized in his day is completely wrong. And now that we've learned over time how passing, defense, and efficiency are a lot more valuable than we thought relative to raw scoring volume, it makes sense that we'd value him even higher. And when we have analytics that rate his age 34-40 seasons higher than anyone of the last 26 years except for LeBron, KG, CP3, and Tatum? Well, it makes sense that we might revise that upward even further.

We're talking about his recognition relative to MVP calibre guys. Stockton was a fine player, for a long time, but he is not a guy you build a contender around. Nash and Paul were.

Stockton's MVP record is nothing like the guys in this range. He has only 3 top 10 finishes (7th, 8th and 9th). Most of the time he's 11-15. Good player. Not even remotely in contention right now.

Same with his efficiency. He was an efficient guy, and that's good, but far more efficient guys are still not on the board when you consider efficiency tends to go down with increased volume. Harden was efficient, was a genuine franchise player, and has been nominated by nobody yet. Harden won MVP and has six top 5 finishes.


Nash only won MVP because he switched teams and people noticed how much better the team got when he moved. If he'd stayed on one team his whole career like Stockton, he never would have had a prayer. Stockton has 13 seasons with a higher BPM than any Nash year.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#91 » by Colbinii » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:34 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:You can’t just throw away KDs warriors years lol

You can justify why you don’t take them at face value which is perfectly fine but you can’t just take them out when making a comparison when those were probably his peak years


I think the Warrior years highlight exactly why KD is so great. He isnt the straw that stirs the drink but he is additive to anything. He raises the baseline of any offense because he can score at an insane rate for undesirable offensive shots.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#92 » by bmoretalksball » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:35 pm

Vote - Dirk Nowitzki
Alt Vote - Kevin Durant
Nomination - Dwyane Wade
Alt Nomination - Charles Barkley


Honestly, I parrot a lot of the sounder reasonings for both Dirk and KD to be the next additions on this list, and while I could go into more detail regarding why'd vote for them, I'd much rather allocate time to explain my reasoning for having Wade as my nomination, and why he's more than worthy of consideration.

To preface my reasoning, I do admittedly have a more peak and prime-quality oriented perspective than most. Within that context, Wade is a more than clear nominee. Comparing Wade's 3-season apex to some contemporaries shows that, in a vacuum at the very least, didn't lag *too far* behind players already voted, and some of their 3-season apexes around the same time period:

'09-'11 Dwyane Wade (RS): 31.0 PTS/75 | 6.1 TRB/75 | 6.9 AST/75 | 3.4 STK/75 | +2.9 rTS% | 65.6 High-Value AST% | 1.3 Bad Pass TOV/75 | +12.52 ORtg On-Off Swing | +8.9 BPM

'06-'08 Kobe Bryant (RS): 32.3 PTS/75 | 5.9 TRB/75 | 5.2 AST/75 | 2.2 STK/75 | +3.2 rTS% | 76.7 High-Value AST% | 0.9 Bad Pass TOV/75 | +10.95 ORtg On-Off Swing | +6.4 BPM


Obviously, Wade has a well-documented injury history that prevented his career from producing enough quality (rather, high quality) seasons to be featured as more of a top 12-15 player. However, I think when comparing his apex to some of the players already ranked on the list, the current pool of nominees, and among the pool of players soon to be anointed to the voting pool, I think he stacks up favorably pared to many, and that HAS to mean something in regard to his placement on such a list.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#93 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:36 pm

One_and_Done wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:You can’t just throw away KDs warriors years lol

You can justify why you don’t take them at face value which is perfectly fine but you can’t just take them out when making a comparison when those were probably his peak years

His post Warriors numbers also suggest that he could hit a higher baseline without the GSW halo effect. The issue was the spacing on those OKC teams.


I wouldn’t read much into post warriors numbers, but I feel the idea that you can really say anything about how peak KD is because of his struggles after an Achilles year is kind of silly
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#94 » by One_and_Done » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:37 pm

bmoretalksball wrote:Vote - Dirk Nowitzki
Alt Vote - Kevin Durant
Nomination - Dwyane Wade
Alt Nomination - Charles Barkley


Honestly, I parrot a lot of the sounder reasonings for both Dirk and KD to be the next additions on this list, and while I could go into more detail regarding why'd vote for them, I'd much rather allocate time to explain my reasoning for having Wade as my nomination, and why he's more than worthy of consideration.

To preface my reasoning, I do admittedly have a more peak and prime-quality oriented perspective than most. Within that context, Wade is a more than clear nominee. Comparing Wade's 3-season apex to some contemporaries shows that, in a vacuum at the very least, didn't lag *too far* behind players already voted, and some of their 3-season apexes around the same time period:

'09-'11 Dwyane Wade (RS): 31.0 PTS/75 | 6.1 TRB/75 | 6.9 AST/75 | 3.4 STK/75 | +2.9 rTS% | 65.6 High-Value AST% | 1.3 Bad Pass TOV/75 | +12.52 ORtg On-Off Swing | +8.9 BPM

'06-'08 Kobe Bryant (RS): 32.3 PTS/75 | 5.9 TRB/75 | 5.2 AST/75 | 2.2 STK/75 | +3.2 rTS% | 76.7 High-Value AST% | 0.9 Bad Pass TOV/75 | +10.95 ORtg On-Off Swing | +6.4 BPM


Obviously, Wade has a well-documented injury history that prevented his career from producing enough quality (rather, high quality) seasons to be featured as more of a top 12-15 player. However, I think when comparing his apex to some of the players already ranked on the list, the current pool of nominees, and among the pool of players soon to be anointed to the voting pool, I think he stacks up favorably pared to many, and that HAS to mean something in regard to his placement on such a list.

I shouldn't complain as he voted for KD, but is this guy eligible?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#95 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:39 pm

Colbinii wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:You can’t just throw away KDs warriors years lol

You can justify why you don’t take them at face value which is perfectly fine but you can’t just take them out when making a comparison when those were probably his peak years


I think the Warrior years highlight exactly why KD is so great. He isnt the straw that stirs the drink but he is additive to anything. He raises the baseline of any offense because he can score at an insane rate for undesirable offensive shots.


I think the Warrior years highlight why KD ISN'T so great. When he replaces Harrison Barnes as a catch and shoot guy, the team barely gets better at all. When Curry was hurt and he had to replace him as the primary offensive creator, the team fell off a cliff. He's a nice accessory, but he's not the guy that's actually making a major impact.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#96 » by 70sFan » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:39 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:You can’t just throw away KDs warriors years lol

You can justify why you don’t take them at face value which is perfectly fine but you can’t just take them out when making a comparison when those were probably his peak years

Who does that?

What's substantial difference there is between 2016 and 2017 Durant?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#97 » by One_and_Done » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:47 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
You think Stockton didn't get any award recognition? He was voted all-NBA 11 times. That's more than KD. Now granted, Magic and Michael did lock down the first team spots a lot of those years, but the idea that he wasn't recognized in his day is completely wrong. And now that we've learned over time how passing, defense, and efficiency are a lot more valuable than we thought relative to raw scoring volume, it makes sense that we'd value him even higher. And when we have analytics that rate his age 34-40 seasons higher than anyone of the last 26 years except for LeBron, KG, CP3, and Tatum? Well, it makes sense that we might revise that upward even further.

We're talking about his recognition relative to MVP calibre guys. Stockton was a fine player, for a long time, but he is not a guy you build a contender around. Nash and Paul were.

Stockton's MVP record is nothing like the guys in this range. He has only 3 top 10 finishes (7th, 8th and 9th). Most of the time he's 11-15. Good player. Not even remotely in contention right now.

Same with his efficiency. He was an efficient guy, and that's good, but far more efficient guys are still not on the board when you consider efficiency tends to go down with increased volume. Harden was efficient, was a genuine franchise player, and has been nominated by nobody yet. Harden won MVP and has six top 5 finishes.


Nash only won MVP because he switched teams and people noticed how much better the team got when he moved. If he'd stayed on one team his whole career like Stockton, he never would have had a prayer. Stockton has 13 seasons with a higher BPM than any Nash year.

Disagree. If Dirk had gotten hurt for instance and he carried the team in his absence, people would have noticed. Stockton did not ever carry the team, and as Dr MJ points out the Jazz peaked as his role diminished.

Nor can one say Stockton was secretly having superstar impact and it was never noticed. Not when you're losing to the 86 Mavs in the 1st round, the 87 Warriors in the 1st round, the 89 Warriors in the 1st round (swept), the 90 Suns in the 1st round, the 93 Sonics in the 1st round, etc. The Jazz were only a 49.77 win team over Stockon's first 9 years with Malone, when he was aged 23 to 31. It seems clear there were not 2 superstars on this team who were secretly unseen, but delivering superstar impact. For mine the credit goes to Malone, but you can decide for yourselves which of the 2 to side with.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#98 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:52 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:So just a couple thoughts pertaining to Pettit & Stockton:

1. I'm not nominating Pettit yet, but he's near that time for me. A thing he demonstrates that I look for when evaluating guys in rapidly changing times is an ability to get more effective statistically at a time when you'd think he should be getting less so. Pettit's efficiency goes up over the course of his career and thus allows him to maintain his TS Add, which given the fact that I think competition was rising rapidly in this time, makes me conclude that that there was nothing fundamental talent-wise holding him back. I think Pettit could be an all-star today.

I think a comparison with Karl Malone & Charles Barkley is telling because I think both Karl & Chuck are more physically talented than Pettit and would tend to give them the advantage over Pettit...but with regards to Barkley I have concerns about defensive effort and temperamental attitude. I give him the peak advantage over Pettit, but really not sure about career.

2. Stating up front that I'm talking about what was instead of what might have been, one of the things that holds Stockton back is that I just rarely see him as a serious candidate for the Top 5 in any given year. I'll absolutely acknowledge here that a key part of what's going on is that I'm giving Malone a Top 5 spot, and while I don't insist on not giving two guys from the team Top 5 slots, it doesn't happen that often.

I bring this up in part because of the conversation about accolades. Basically, Stockton's a guy who year-to-year just isn't in that top tier of accolade-getters the way most others in this rare air are, and so to the extent that we feel we can use this as a proxy for how impressive his years were, it naturally tends to hurt him. I think that part there is a place for debate so I'll acknowledge that before going to another point.

There are all sorts of all-in-one stats that absolutely love Stockton, and such stats are inherently more nuanced than rankings, so one can argue that the actual rank should be essentially thrown out because of how good Stockton's stats look.

I don't have Stockton super-low or anything, but I think where I tend to struggle is when I recognize 2 things:

1. The Jazz are as big of a deal as they are because of their peak in the mid-to-late '90s when the team became less about "Stockton and Malone" and more about "Malone and satellites". It's one thing for Stockton not quite be up there with his teammate, and quite another when we recognize that the team literally seems to peak as they relegate him to a smaller role.

2. There were times where we would have hoped that a 2nd star would take advantage of the pressure places on the 1st and put up big numbers - a la Big Game James Worthy. And the reality is that that's not how it was with Stockton for the vast majority of his career, and especially not so by the time the Jazz peaked. The fact that Stockton was an efficient scorer becomes less sexy when I see that he was so much likely than other players we tend to discuss at these ranks to decide "Okay, time for me to take over."

Stockton supporters will rightly point out that there were signs he could do something more along these lines early in his time as a starter, and thus arguably might've been able to do that in the Jazz years of contention. But even if that was simply a bad choice by Jerry Sloan, it's what was, and "what was" is what I'm personally trying to focus on with my criteria at this time.

It's possible that Stockton could have done what Nash did, but he didn't do it, and so Nash has an edge in my evaluation over him.

And I'll say that I think it's not just possible that Nash could have been playing at his MVP level years earlier, but I think he absolutely could have done so - I don't think he came into the league "raw" - and if he had done so he'd rank considerably higher on my list - higher than Kobe, for example - but that's not what happened, so that's not where I have him.


I don't think numbers can account for how much better Stockton was then Nash on defense. He didn't even gamble much and still averaged nearly 3 steals per game over his prime due to his incredibly quick hands and fast reactions. Meanwhile, Nash was a serious liability on D for most of his career and at times one of the worst defenders in the entire league. However, using some of those box score numbers, I think it's very interesting to compare Stockton and Nash's top 15 seasons by BPM:

Stock: 9.0, 8.9, 8.7, 8.5, 8.3, 8.3, 8.0, 6.8, 6.7, 6.6, 6.6, 6.6, 6.1, 5.6, 5.3
Nash: 5.9, 5.0, 4.7, 4.6, 4.3, 3.9, 3.4, 3.2, 3.1, 2.8, 2.5, 2.4, 1.4, 0.4, -0.9

That's a MASSIVE MASSIVE box score gap. I know Nash was better at making aggressive passes, but again remember, these numbers won't be able to understand the entirety of the defensive gap either. If you're wondering if the playoffs look any better for Nash they don't:

Stock: 12.0, 8.8, 8.7, 8.6, 8.4, 7.8, 6.7, 6.6, 6.4, 6.1
Nash: 5.2, 4.7, 4.6, 3.7, 2.4, 2.3, 2.2, 2.1, 1.7, 0.0

I think there's a tendency with Nash to be like "we can ignore his somewhat pedestrian box score numbers because his impact numbers are so much better", but with Stockton who also outperforms his box score numbers like crazy with impact numbers AND has elite box score numbers to begin with, he's completely marginalized. I think if we actually had play-by-play data for more of Stockton's peak years, people would be a lot less likely to question whether his peak held up to Nash and we'd be comparing him to people higher on the list instead.


I'm not sure how this is a rebuttal to my statements, but I certainly see the argument that Stockton was the better player because of defense.

Re: if we had Stockton's play-by-play data from peak. I look forward to getting more access to this data with time and we'll see what it shows. I will say that the first play-by-play data we got access to - from the latest years - made Stockton look better than Malone, and so the question of whether that would hold up with time was one we've had for many years. But as we've gotten more data, I think it's cemented Malone's greater importance during their prime years.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#99 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 24, 2023 10:57 pm

Owly wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:So just a couple thoughts pertaining to Pettit & Stockton:

1. I'm not nominating Pettit yet, but he's near that time for me. A thing he demonstrates that I look for when evaluating guys in rapidly changing times is an ability to get more effective statistically at a time when you'd think he should be getting less so. Pettit's efficiency goes up over the course of his career and thus allows him to maintain his TS Add, which given the fact that I think competition was rising rapidly in this time, makes me conclude that that there was nothing fundamental talent-wise holding him back. I think Pettit could be an all-star today.

I think a comparison with Karl Malone & Charles Barkley is telling because I think both Karl & Chuck are more physically talented than Pettit and would tend to give them the advantage over Pettit...but with regards to Barkley I have concerns about defensive effort and temperamental attitude. I give him the peak advantage over Pettit, but really not sure about career.

2. Stating up front that I'm talking about what was instead of what might have been, one of the things that holds Stockton back is that I just rarely see him as a serious candidate for the Top 5 in any given year. I'll absolutely acknowledge here that a key part of what's going on is that I'm giving Malone a Top 5 spot, and while I don't insist on not giving two guys from the team Top 5 slots, it doesn't happen that often.

I bring this up in part because of the conversation about accolades. Basically, Stockton's a guy who year-to-year just isn't in that top tier of accolade-getters the way most others in this rare air are, and so to the extent that we feel we can use this as a proxy for how impressive his years were, it naturally tends to hurt him. I think that part there is a place for debate so I'll acknowledge that before going to another point.

There are all sorts of all-in-one stats that absolutely love Stockton, and such stats are inherently more nuanced than rankings, so one can argue that the actual rank should be essentially thrown out because of how good Stockton's stats look.

I don't have Stockton super-low or anything, but I think where I tend to struggle is when I recognize 2 things:

1. The Jazz are as big of a deal as they are because of their peak in the mid-to-late '90s when the team became less about "Stockton and Malone" and more about "Malone and satellites". It's one thing for Stockton not quite be up there with his teammate, and quite another when we recognize that the team literally seems to peak as they relegate him to a smaller role.

2. There were times where we would have hoped that a 2nd star would take advantage of the pressure places on the 1st and put up big numbers - a la Big Game James Worthy. And the reality is that that's not how it was with Stockton for the vast majority of his career, and especially not so by the time the Jazz peaked. The fact that Stockton was an efficient scorer becomes less sexy when I see that he was so much likely than other players we tend to discuss at these ranks to decide "Okay, time for me to take over."

Stockton supporters will rightly point out that there were signs he could do something more along these lines early in his time as a starter, and thus arguably might've been able to do that in the Jazz years of contention. But even if that was simply a bad choice by Jerry Sloan, it's what was, and "what was" is what I'm personally trying to focus on with my criteria at this time.

It's possible that Stockton could have done what Nash did, but he didn't do it, and so Nash has an edge in my evaluation over him.

And I'll say that I think it's not just possible that Nash could have been playing at his MVP level years earlier, but I think he absolutely could have done so - I don't think he came into the league "raw" - and if he had done so he'd rank considerably higher on my list - higher than Kobe, for example - but that's not what happened, so that's not where I have him.

So regarding Worthy and "big numbers" just looking at 87-89 his best box-playoffs and only '97 for Stockton, his healthier Jazz peaked run. Stockton's best game BPM is a 21.5 in the finals. That's better than all but all bar one of Worthy's games: a 22.1 in game one (an early series game ...) round 1 versus the -1.14 SRS Nuggets. There's more than one way to be effective.

BPM is only one measure, I'm open to discussion on the best single game metrics. This is only one Stockton game and run I'm looking at etc...


I'm talking about Stockton showing regular signs of volume scoring when defenses seemed to be able to stop the Jazz' primary attack. In general in Stockton's career we see him as drastically less likely to volume shoot than other point guards to a degree that's concerning. Just because you're a pass-first guy doesn't mean we shouldn't see you volume shoot when the defense gives that to you.

As I alluded to, we do see some of this in the '80s with Stockton, so it's not crazy to argue that Stockton was fully capable of this all through his career...it's just that he didn't.

No matter how much you shoot, it's good to be efficient, but the gold standard is always to be able to scale to volume with facility while maintaining that efficiency. If your team offense is struggling and you're still not shooting very much, even if what you do is still efficient, it puts you in something of a lower tier of player compared to the guys who actually take what the defense gives them.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #18 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/26/23) 

Post#100 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Aug 24, 2023 11:04 pm

One_and_Done wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:We're talking about his recognition relative to MVP calibre guys. Stockton was a fine player, for a long time, but he is not a guy you build a contender around. Nash and Paul were.

Stockton's MVP record is nothing like the guys in this range. He has only 3 top 10 finishes (7th, 8th and 9th). Most of the time he's 11-15. Good player. Not even remotely in contention right now.

Same with his efficiency. He was an efficient guy, and that's good, but far more efficient guys are still not on the board when you consider efficiency tends to go down with increased volume. Harden was efficient, was a genuine franchise player, and has been nominated by nobody yet. Harden won MVP and has six top 5 finishes.


Nash only won MVP because he switched teams and people noticed how much better the team got when he moved. If he'd stayed on one team his whole career like Stockton, he never would have had a prayer. Stockton has 13 seasons with a higher BPM than any Nash year.

Disagree. If Dirk had gotten hurt for instance and he carried the team in his absence, people would have noticed. Stockton did not ever carry the team, and as Dr MJ points out the Jazz peaked as his role diminished.

Nor can one say Stockton was secretly having superstar impact and it was never noticed. Not when you're losing to the 86 Mavs in the 1st round, the 87 Warriors in the 1st round, the 89 Warriors in the 1st round (swept), the 90 Suns in the 1st round, the 93 Sonics in the 1st round, etc. The Jazz were only a 49.77 win team over Stockon's first 9 years with Malone, when he was aged 23 to 31. It seems clear there were not 2 superstars on this team who were secretly unseen, but delivering superstar impact. For mine the credit goes to Malone, but you can decide for yourselves which of the 2 to side with.


OK, but Dirk never got hurt and neither did Malone. How's Stockton supposed to show what he can do in Malone's absence when Malone never missed more than 2 games in a year the entire time he played in Utah? If lack of playoff success is what you're dinging Stockton for, here are the top 10 BPMs for Stockton and Malone in any given postseason:

Stockton: 12.0, 8.8, 8.7, 8.6, 8.4, 7.8, 6.7, 6.6, 6.4, 6.1
K. Malone: 7.3, 7.1, 6.5, 6.5, 6.0, 4.7, 4.7, 4.5, 4.0, 3.9

You bring up the Jazz getting swept in '89, but Stockton averaged 27/3/14/4/2 that series on 51/75/91. He was a Superman. Whatever the problem was, he wasn't it.

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